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Cheat Codes is an American electronic music DJ trio. Consisting of KEVI (Kevin Ford / Prince$$ Rosie), Trevor Dahl, and Matthew Russell based in Los Angeles, the group is notable for their 2016 single "Sex", which samples the chorus from "Let's Talk About Sex" by Salt-N-Pepa, [2] and their 2017 single "No Promises", which featured American singer Demi Lovato and peaked within the top 40 of the ...
Boyz n da Hood was an American Southern gangsta rap group from Atlanta, Georgia. They were formerly signed to Sean Combs' Bad Boy Records and consisted of Young Jeezy, Jody Breeze, Gorilla Zoe, Big Gee, and Big Duke. They have collaborated several times with fellow Atlanta, Georgia artist and Block Ent labelmate Yung Joc.
Da Hood (slang for "the neighborhood") usually refers to an underclass big-city neighborhood, with high crime rates and low-income housing. It may also refer to: Da Hood, a 1995 album by the Menace Clan; A rap group signed to Hoo-Bangin' Records; A rap supergroup; see Mack 10 Presents da Hood
Mack 10 Presents Da Hood is the only collaborative studio album by American rappers Mack 10, Deviossi (deceased), [5] Skoop Delania, K-Mac, Cousteau and Techniec (together known as Da Hood). It was released July 23, 2002 through D3 Entertainment and Hoo Bangin' with distribution via Riviera Entertainment.
Boyz n da Hood is the debut studio album by American Southern hip hop group Boyz n da Hood. It was released on June 21, 2005, through Bad Boy South / Atlantic Records . Recording sessions took place at Sho'Nuff Studios, PatchWerk Recording Studios , The Zone, 730 Beat Street, Futuristic Recording Studios and D.A.R.P. Studios in Atlanta and at ...
"Dem Boyz" is the first single from Boyz n da Hood's self-titled debut album. The song reached number 56 on the Billboard Hot 100 , number 15 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, and number 13 on the Rap Songs chart.
Hispanic rap group Brownside did a remake to the song called "Vatos in the Barrio" on their 1999 album Payback. The instrumental of the original is remade, and the lyrics are slightly different but keep the main structure of the Eazy-E version. Underground Memphis rapper Koopsta Knicca of Three 6 Mafia made his own version called "Back in da Hood".
The Block Obama: Hood Politics was originally going to be hosted by DJ Whoo Kid and DJ Strong, but ended up being released un-tagged without a DJ, and for free download on the internet. [18] Block Obama II was released on the day of the 2008 Presidential election, originally as a digital album for sale through iTunes , Amazon, Napster ...